<p>Twenty-five anti-junta fighters and civilians were killed during clashes with the military in central Myanmar, villagers said Sunday, as locals increasingly take up arms against the regime in the coup-wracked country.</p>.<p>Myanmar has been in turmoil since a February coup that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's government, with 890 people killed in a junta crackdown on dissent, according to a local monitoring group.</p>.<p>In some areas civilians have formed "defence forces" to combat the State Administration Council, as the junta dubs itself, often using hunting rifles or makeshift weapons cobbled together from household items.</p>.<p>The central Sagaing region has been the site of multiple skirmishes between defence forces and the military, and on Friday fighting broke out in Depayin township.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/un-to-myanmar-military-now-release-aung-san-suu-kyi-1003885.html" target="_blank">Read | UN to Myanmar military: Now release Aung San Suu Kyi</a></strong></p>.<p>Residents told AFP that military trucks entered their area and opened fire on a village near the jungle hoping to flush out members of the local defence force.</p>.<p>"We heard the shooting of artillery 26 times," said a villager, who added that anti-junta fighters tried to retaliate but could not fend off the attack.</p>.<p>"They shot everyone who they saw on the road and in the village. They did not just have one target," he said.</p>.<p>Civilians were among the dead, he added.</p>.<p>Villagers waited until Saturday to venture out of their homes to assess the casualties, said a member of the local defence force who helped to organise the collection of bodies.</p>.<p>"We firstly got nine dead bodies and buried them," he told AFP, adding that eight more were found by a different team and also buried the same day.</p>.<p>On Sunday, they found eight more bodies.</p>.<p>"I noticed from their bodies that most of them were shot in the head," he said -- an observation that another man who helped move the dead confirmed to AFP.</p>.<p>The anti-junta fighter said the security presence around Depayin was increasing, displacing thousands of residents who had fled in fear of further military action.</p>.<p>"The army has been hunting us in the jungle since this morning," he said.</p>.<p>BBC News Burmese -- the BBC's Myanmar language service -- reported a similar death toll.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/revolution-love-sweeps-myanmar-protest-barricades-1003067.html" target="_blank">Read | 'Revolution Love' sweeps Myanmar protest barricades</a></strong></p>.<p>State-run media offered a different account of the skirmish, saying the military was patrolling the area when they were ambushed.</p>.<p>Soldiers fended off "armed terrorists" and later found "four mortars and six percussion lock firearms", reported the Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper, which did not give a death toll in the village.</p>.<p>In another attack in a different part of Sagaing one member of the security forces was killed and authorities were "working to stabilise the area", the paper added.</p>.<p>Despite the threat of crackdowns, protesters in Myanmar are still taking to the streets daily in defiance of the military regime.</p>.<p>On Sunday residents across Sagaing held short demonstrations, flashing a three-finger salute of defiance during rapid marches through the streets.</p>
<p>Twenty-five anti-junta fighters and civilians were killed during clashes with the military in central Myanmar, villagers said Sunday, as locals increasingly take up arms against the regime in the coup-wracked country.</p>.<p>Myanmar has been in turmoil since a February coup that ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's government, with 890 people killed in a junta crackdown on dissent, according to a local monitoring group.</p>.<p>In some areas civilians have formed "defence forces" to combat the State Administration Council, as the junta dubs itself, often using hunting rifles or makeshift weapons cobbled together from household items.</p>.<p>The central Sagaing region has been the site of multiple skirmishes between defence forces and the military, and on Friday fighting broke out in Depayin township.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/un-to-myanmar-military-now-release-aung-san-suu-kyi-1003885.html" target="_blank">Read | UN to Myanmar military: Now release Aung San Suu Kyi</a></strong></p>.<p>Residents told AFP that military trucks entered their area and opened fire on a village near the jungle hoping to flush out members of the local defence force.</p>.<p>"We heard the shooting of artillery 26 times," said a villager, who added that anti-junta fighters tried to retaliate but could not fend off the attack.</p>.<p>"They shot everyone who they saw on the road and in the village. They did not just have one target," he said.</p>.<p>Civilians were among the dead, he added.</p>.<p>Villagers waited until Saturday to venture out of their homes to assess the casualties, said a member of the local defence force who helped to organise the collection of bodies.</p>.<p>"We firstly got nine dead bodies and buried them," he told AFP, adding that eight more were found by a different team and also buried the same day.</p>.<p>On Sunday, they found eight more bodies.</p>.<p>"I noticed from their bodies that most of them were shot in the head," he said -- an observation that another man who helped move the dead confirmed to AFP.</p>.<p>The anti-junta fighter said the security presence around Depayin was increasing, displacing thousands of residents who had fled in fear of further military action.</p>.<p>"The army has been hunting us in the jungle since this morning," he said.</p>.<p>BBC News Burmese -- the BBC's Myanmar language service -- reported a similar death toll.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/revolution-love-sweeps-myanmar-protest-barricades-1003067.html" target="_blank">Read | 'Revolution Love' sweeps Myanmar protest barricades</a></strong></p>.<p>State-run media offered a different account of the skirmish, saying the military was patrolling the area when they were ambushed.</p>.<p>Soldiers fended off "armed terrorists" and later found "four mortars and six percussion lock firearms", reported the Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper, which did not give a death toll in the village.</p>.<p>In another attack in a different part of Sagaing one member of the security forces was killed and authorities were "working to stabilise the area", the paper added.</p>.<p>Despite the threat of crackdowns, protesters in Myanmar are still taking to the streets daily in defiance of the military regime.</p>.<p>On Sunday residents across Sagaing held short demonstrations, flashing a three-finger salute of defiance during rapid marches through the streets.</p>